In Re Wilson

274 B.R. 4, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1785, 2001 WL 1771992
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedDecember 6, 2001
Docket99-02234
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 274 B.R. 4 (In Re Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Wilson, 274 B.R. 4, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1785, 2001 WL 1771992 (D.D.C. 2001).

Opinion

DECISION RE TRUSTEE’S SECOND MOTION TO MODIFY CONFIRMATION ORDER

S. MARTIN TEEL, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

The Chapter 13 trustee’s Second Motion to Modify Confirmation Order of February 15, 2000, Post^Confirmation (the “Motion”) (Docket Entry “D.E.” No. 58, filed August 31, 2001) will be denied for the following reasons. The trustee commenced plan payments to general unsecured creditors prior to the expiration of the governmental claims bar date (because the debtors’ schedules reflected governmental claims in amounts that were sufficiently small to permit her to make such distributions without falling short of having on hand amounts necessary to pay the governmental claims once filed). Because of the subsequent filing of unexpectedly large governmental claims entitled to payment under the plan, the trustee seeks to increase plan payments in order to assure that sufficient funds are received to pay allowed secured and priority claims in full, and to bring the pro rata distribution paid on governmental entities’ general unsecured claims to the same percentage as already paid on non-governmental entities’ general unsecured claims. The trustee’s appropriate remedy is to recover the excess payments made to holders of nongovernmental allowed general unsecured claims, not to amend the plan.

I

The debtors filed a voluntary petition in Chapter 13 on November 2, 1999. The debtors’ schedules, filed with their petition, listed secured debts totaling $608,382.51, priority debts (unsecured claims entitled to *7 priority under 11 U.S.C. § 507(a)) totaling $101,432.07, and general unsecured debts (unsecured claims not entitled to priority under 11 U.S.C. § 507(a)) totaling $205,157.51. On January 31, 2000, the debtors removed by praecipe (D.E. No. 14) a $60,000.00 general unsecured claim from the schedules as the unsecured claim was duplicative of an unsecured priority claim also listed, thereby reducing the debtors’ scheduled general unsecured debt to $145,157.51. The debtors’ amended Chapter 13 plan (D.E. No. 10, filed January 12, 2000) that was confirmed by the court’s Order Confirming Amended Plan Filed January 12, 2000 (D.E. No. 15, entered February 15, 2000) provided for payments to be made by the debtors to the trustee of $4,425.00 per month for fifty-nine months, for a total payment of $261,075.00. From a total funding of $261,075.00, the debtors’ confirmed Chapter 13 plan provided for full payment (with seven-percent per an-num post-confirmation interest) of allowed secured claims (other than ones of no relevance here) and of priority claims (unsecured claims entitled to priority under 11 U.S.C. § 507(a)), but for payment of general unsecured debts (unsecured claims not entitled to priority under 11 U.S.C. § 507(a)) at a “variable rate,” meaning that the payments on these claims would vary according to what was left after payment of those claims that were to be paid in full.

At the time of confirmation, neither the non-governmental claims bar date of March 19, 2000, nor the governmental claims bar date of May 1, 2000, had passed. By the non-governmental claims bar date, secured claims totaling $246,133.05 (including a $245,460.68 first deed of trust on the debtors’ residence and $672.37 in other secured claims) and general unsecured claims totaling $125,043.39 had been filed. By the governmental claims bar date, additional secured claims totaling $149,718.83, priority claims totaling $82,447.59, and general unsecured claims totaling $134,091.65 had been filed. 1 A total of $395,851.88 in secured claims, $82,447.59 in priority claims, and $259,135.04 in general unsecured claims were filed in the debtors’ case.

Subsequent to the non-governmental claims bar date, the trustee objected to $1,691.45 of general unsecured claims and $672.37 of secured claims. The trustee’s objections were sustained by orders entered April 3, 2000. Accordingly, the allowed claims in the debtors’ case were secured claims totaling $395,179.51, priority claims totaling $82,447.59, and general unsecured claims totaling $257,443.59.

The only secured debt to be paid through the debtors’ Chapter 13 plan is that of the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) in the amount of $149,718.83. 2 *8 Thus, the Chapter 13 plan provided for full payment of secured claims of $149,718.83, 3 full payment of priority claims of $32,024.57, and a variable rate payment on general unsecured claims which total $240,668.77.

After confirmation of the debtors’ Chapter 13 plan, but prior to governmental claims bar date, the trustee began making distributions on filed claims, including general unsecured claims. The trustee relied on the amounts of the debts listed in the debtors’ schedules in determining that funds to be paid under the plan were sufficient to permit a distribution to general unsecured creditors. After the passage of the governmental claims bar date, it became apparent to the trustee that her initial determination was in error: the balance of the funds to be paid by the debtors into the Chapter 13 plan would be insufficient, given the payments already made on general unsecured claims, to pay the secured claim of the IRS in full with interest, to pay the priority claims in full, and to pay the IRS and District of Columbia a percentage of their general unsecured claims equal to that percentage already paid on the other general unsecured claims.

II

By the Motion, the trustee seeks to increase the debtors’ plan payment:

to provide for sufficient funding to pay all properly filed priority and secured claims in full with requisite post-confirmation interest per annum and to provide for the pro-rata distribution of approximately 23% to all general unsecured claims based primarily on the filing of priority tax claims in the total amount of $82,447.59 and secured tax claims in the total amount of $149,718.83, substantially greater than scheduled by the debtors.

The debtors’ objection to the Motion asserts that the plan, as originally confirmed, provided “sufficient funding to pay all secured tax claims with interest [and] all priority claims required by the Bankruptcy Code.” Further the debtors assert that the need for additional funding to pay all priority and secured claims in full with interest and to provide a pro-rata distribution of twenty-three percent to all general unsecured creditors arose solely from the trustee’s actions in beginning to make distributions to unsecured creditors prior to ascertaining the full extent of the tax claims to be filed in the case. The debtors argue that they should not be required to pay more money into the plan to provide all unsecured creditors a pro-rata distribution of twenty-three percent when no such set distribution was to provided for in the plan. Rather, the plan, as noticed to creditors, provided only that “ALL UNSECURED CREDITORS SHALL BE PAID VARIABLE RATE.”

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Bluebook (online)
274 B.R. 4, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1785, 2001 WL 1771992, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wilson-dcd-2001.